Computational Characterization of the Dependence of Halide

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Computational Characterization of the Dependence of Halide Perovskite Effective Masses on Chemical Composition and Structure Negar Ashari Astani, Simone Meloni, Amir Hesam Salavati, Giulia Palermo, Michael Grätzel, and Ursula Rothlisberger J. Phys. Chem. C, Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcc.7b04898 • Publication Date (Web): 29 Aug 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on August 31, 2017

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Computational Characterization of the Dependence of Halide Perovskite Effective Masses on Chemical Composition and Structure. Negar Ashari-Astani,†,k Simone Meloni,†,‡ Amir Hesam Salavati,¶,⊥ Giulia Palermo,†,# Michael Gr¨atzel,§ and Ursula Rothlisberger∗,∗,† ´ †Ecole Polytechnique F´ed´erale de Lausanne, Laboratory of computational chemistry and biochemistry (LCBC), Lausanne, Switzerland, CH-1015. ‡Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Iniversity of Rome “Sapienza”, via Eudossiana 18, 00184 Roma, Italy. ´ ¶Ecole Polytechnique F´ed´erale de Lausanne, Audiovisual Communications Laboratory (LCAV), Lausanne, Switzerland, CH-1015. ´ §Ecole Polytechnique F´ed´erale de Lausanne, Laboratory of photonics and interfaces (LPI), Lausanne, Switzerland, CH-1015. kSharif university of technology, Dept. of Physics, Tehran, Iran ⊥Sharif university of technology, Innovation Center (ICT), Tehran, Iran #McCammon Group, Chemistry and Biochemistry Department at University of California, San Diego, CA, USA E-mail: [email protected]

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Abstract Effective masses are calculated for a large variety of perovskites ABX3 differing in chemical composition (A= Na, Li, Cs; B=Pb, Sn; X= Cl, Br, I) and crystal structure. In addition, the effect of some defects and dopants is assessed. We show that effective masses are highly correlated with the energy of the valence band maximum, conduction band minimum and band gap. Using the k· p theory for the bottom of the conduction band and a tight binding model for the top of the valence band, this trend can be rationalized in terms of the orbital overlap between halide and metal (B cation). Most of the compounds studied in this work are good charge carrier transporters, where effective masses of Pb-compounds (0 < m∗h < m∗e < 1) are systematically larger than those of Sn-based compounds (0 < m∗h ≃ m∗e < 0.5). Effective masses show anisotropies depending on the crystal symmetry of the perovskite, whether orthorhombic, tetragonal or cubic, with the highest anisotropy for the tetragonal phase (c.a. 40%). In general, effective masses of perovskite remain low for intrinsic or extrinsic defects, apart some notable exception. While some dopants, like Zn(II), flatten the conduction band edges (m∗e = 1.7 m0 ) and introduce deep defect states, vacancies, more specifically Pb2+ vacancies, make the valence band edge more shallow (m∗h = 0.9 m0 ). From a deviceperformance point of view, introducing modifications that increase the orbital overlap (e.g., more cubic structures, larger halides, smaller (larger) monovalent cations in cubic (tetragonal/orthorhombic) structures, etc.) decrease the band gap and, with it, charge carriers’ effective masses.

Introduction Twenty years after their first discovery as possible transistors, 1 halide organic/inorganic perovskites (HOPs) with the composition of ABX3 (A = organic or inorganic monovalent cation, B = bivalent cation, X = halide) have attracted a lot of attention due to their breakthrough performance in third-generation solar cells. 2–4 Efficiencies as high as 22.1% 5 have recently been reported for perovskite solar cells and future efficiency increases up to 30%, 2

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close to Shockely-Queisser limit, seem feasible. 6 Perovskites owe their superb performance to the high open circuit voltage (VOC ∼ 1 V for iodide perovskites and up to ∼ 1.5 V for bromide ones), 7,8 long charge carrier lifetime ( > 15µs) 9,10 and low non-radiative carrier recombination rate (c.a. 8 × 10−12 cm3 s−1 ). 11 The apt band gap of ∼1.65 eV makes classic methylammonium lead iodide perovskite (CH3 NH3 PbI3 ) an excellent light harvester, and performancewise puts it in the class of highly efficient materials for thin-film solar cells, at a level comparable with e.g., CdTe and CIGS. Hand in hand with experimental studies, computational investigations have been undertaken to shed light on the origin of the unique electronic properties of halide perovskites. Using density functional theory (DFT), the effect of halide and cation variations on the optical band gap and band structure, and how the temperature affects them, the influence of crystal defects, steric effects and the possible role of the perovskites/T iO2 interface have been investigated. 6,12–17 Due to a fortuitous cancellation of spin-orbit and many-body effects, standard DFT calculations within the generalized gradient approximation (GGA), are able to predict the band gaps of lead halide perovskites in close agreement with experimental measurements. The energetics, i.e. the relative energy difference between various phases, are also well described at the GGA level. 18 Even more relevant to the present work, using GW as a reference, Umari et al. showed that spin-orbit coupling (SOC) is crucial to determine accurately the band structure of halide perovskites, and DFT+SOC can give an adequate description of bands dispersion close to the valence band maximum (VBM) and conduction band minimum (CBM). 19 In our previous work 16 we demonstrated how one can rationalize and predict the effects of chemical composition and symmetry variations on the VBM and CBM energy of halide perovskites through their effect on two key parameters, the overlap between metal and halide orbitals and the effective charge of the divalent cation, determining the energy of these orbitals. In this work we delve deeper into another equally important property of HOPs which affect the charge carrier transport characteristics: the hole and electron effective

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masses. It is worth stressing that charge carrier transport is also affected by the scattering of charge carriers by phonons, which is not discussed here. In the field of semiconductors, the semi-classical model of electron dynamics, in which electrons and holes are assigned effective masses, mh and me , has been very successful. 20 Retaining a lot of the simplicity of free electron models, an effective mass picture provides semi-quantitative predictions for one of the term determining the efficiency of charge carrier transport. Recently, this model has been applied to some HOP systems by different groups. 21–31 In these works the authors computed effective masses of single halide perovskite systems, 22–24,29 or compared the masses of a limited number of systems differing in the type of monovalent

27,30,31

or divalent cation, 26,28 or halide. 21,25 Despite the diversity of the applied

approaches for calculating the effective masses, all the reported values (except for few abnormal and inappropriate values that we will discuss in the Sec. Theory)unanimously agree that both electron and hole effective masses are in the range of good carrier transporters, in accordance with the experimental measurements of carrier mobility. 32,33 The physical/chemical origin of this property, however, has remained an open question. In this work we calculate mh and me for a wide range of Sn and Pb-based perovskites that differ in the chemical nature of the monovalent cation (Na, Li, Cs, and some organic molecular ions), the halide (I, Br, Cl), and the crystal symmetry (cubic, tetragonal and orthorhombic). Indeed, the broad range of systems investigated here made it possible to better understand the dependence of effective masses on the chemical and physical properties of halide perovskites. The fact that we consider all-inorganic halide perovskites might appear in conflict with the trend to focus on hybrid organic-inorganic systems. The reason of our choice is manifold. Hybrid perovskites, in particular CH3 NH3 PbI3 , have a limited stability, which has been attributed to the decomposition of methylammonium promoted by humidity. 34 Thus, researchers are trying to replace or limit the content of organic cations by developing allinorganic or mixed organic/inorganic-cations halide perovskites. For example, recently it has been shown that α-CsPbI3 quantum dots are stable in ambient air, 35 and this or sim-

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ilar materials are candidates to cope with the problem of stability of hybrid perovskites. Other authors have also reported the synthesis of CsPbI3 perovskites. 36,37 Indeed, the general interest for mixed cation and/or halide perovskites, which have shown high efficiency and enhanced stability thanks to the replacement of methylammonium and/or formamidinium by inorganic cations and iodine by bromine, 18,38 and the addition of small monovalent cations 39 call for the investigation of a broad set of systems. Moreover, the research of these years has shown that halide perovskites have potential technological applications beyond photovoltaics (e.g. lasing, LED, photodetection), for which optical properties different from those needed for solar cells are sought after. Thus, other systems, such as CsPbBr3 are of great interest. Finally, a technical question concerns the modeling of rotationally highly mobile methylammonium (and formamidinium) ion in static first principles calculations. Experiments and simulations (see, e.g., 40–44 ) have shown that the residence time of methylammonium in metastable orientation states is on the picosecond timescale. Thus, a single configuration of methylammonium-based halide perovskites is not representative of the state of the system. Previous computational works 13,42 have shown that the electronic structure of the VBM and CBM, which determine effective masses, is related to the monovalent cations through the effect of this ion on the BX− 3 3D network. In this work we use Cs-based perovskites, in particular CsPbI3 , also to mimic the average structure of CH3 NH3 PbI3 . We remark that in simulations 3D perovskite CsPbI3 is metastable and has a bandgap similar to CH3 NH3 PbI3 . 16 It is worth mentioning that analogous approaches have been adopted in other works (see, + 46 e.g., Ref. 45 – the analogies between CH3 NH+ 3 and and Cs are shortly discussed in Ref. ).

Anticipating our results, we have found that, consistently with tight binding and k· p theories, 47 effective masses are strongly correlated with B/ns-X/mp orbitals overlap and band gap. 16 Thus, one can tune electron and hole effective masses by acting on those parameters affecting the orbital overlap. We also investigate the effect of intrinsic (vacancies) and extrinsic (doping) defects on the effective masses. We found that while doping might be beneficial in view of increasing the concentration of free charge carriers, it turns out that,

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e.g., Zn(II) doping can have some detrimental effects on carrier transport in some cases.

Theory In the semi-classical theory of transport 48 holes (mh ) and electrons (me ) effective masses control the response of these particles to an electric field. Thus, mh and me , together with the scattering of charge carriers by phonons, are two key quantities determining the transport properties of charge carriers in perovskites. In 3D crystal systems, the effective ˆ h and M ˆ e , is related to the Hessian matrix of the mass tensor of holes and electrons, phys cM ˆ h/e = h ˆ′′ is the Hessian matrix of elements energy at the VBM or CBM: M ¯ 2 /2 ǫˆ′′−1 h/e , where ǫ ǫˆ′′i,j = ∂ 2 ǫ(k)/∂ki ∂kj , ǫ is the energy of the frontier orbitals of the valence and conduction bands, and Aˆ−1 denotes an inverse matrix. Effective masses are more conveniently computed and analyzed in the reference frame of the eigenvectors of the Hessian matrix. In this ˆ h/e is a diagonal matrix of elements mα = h framework M ¯ 2 /(2ǫ“α ), where ǫ“α is one of the eigenvalues of the Hessian matrix. Indeed, mh/e,α is the effective mass for the hole/electron transport along the direction of the corresponding eigenvector. In this work, effective masses are obtained according to the following algorithm. First, the Hessian matrix is computed from a parabolic fitting of the energy of the frontier orbitals of the valence and conduction bands at a set of k-points around k0 , the k-point corresponding to the VBM or CBM: ǫ(k) = ǫ(k0 )+1/2(k−k0 )T ǫˆ′′ (k−k0 ) ((·)T denotes the transpose of the vector). In particular, we use an 3 × 3 × 3 grid of k-points of spacing ∆k. The suitable value for ∆k is discussed below. Second, the Hessian matrix is diagonalized to yield the principal axes of charge carrier transport (eigenvectors) and their corresponding eigenvalues. Finally, from the eigenvalues of the Hessian matrix the effective masses along these eigenvectors are obtained, as discussed in the previous paragraph. We remark that we focus on a specific sub-band around its maximum/minimum, i.e. a band of same band index n, and not on the curvature of the overall valence or conduction band. Thus, we are able to determine

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the hole/electron effective masses also when the maximum/minimum is split due to SOC in locally polarized domains, which has been shown to be present in some halide perovskites (see, e.g., Refs. 49 and 50 ) The above procedure requires suitable values for ∆k = |k − k0 |. To tune and validate 21,23,24,32 this parameter we focus on the largely studied MAPbI3 system, (MA=CH3 NH+ 3 ).

In Table 1 we report the average values of effective masses for three different values of ∆k: |~a|/100, |~a|/400 and |~a|/800, where |~a| is the length of a reciprocal lattice vectors. Thus, while the spacing of the k-point grid is the same in all directions for cubic structures, it differs between the axial and equatorial directions for tetragonal systems, and changes in all the three directions for orthorhombic structures. The suitable value of ∆k depends how broad the energy dispersion curve is around k0 : broader curves are best fitted with coarser grids and narrower curves require smoother grids. In fact, if the grid spans a too wide space the second order approximation to the energy is insufficient. On the contrary, if the space spanned is too narrow the change in the energy from the maximum of the valence band (minimum of the conduction band) is negligible, and the error on the estimation of the Hessian, and therefore on effective masses, is large. The suitability of a value of ∆k is measured by the coefficient of determination R2 of the parabolic approximation of the dispersion curve k0 , which, typically, must be ≥ 0.9. Table 1 shows that the effect of the grid spacing on the estimation of the masses can be quite dramatic, with holes and electrons masses reaching values as high as 18.7 m0 and as low as 0.03 m0 , respectively (m0 is the electron rest mass). The present analysis suggests that a possible explanation of the anomalous data reported in Refs. 25 and 51 for orthorhombic MAPbI3 (me = 11.979 m0 ) and MASnCl3 (me = 13.19 m0 ) might be due to an improper calculation procedure. On the contrary, the results reported in Table 1 for ∆k = |~a|/400, i.e. at the maximum value of R2 , are in good agreement with experimental 32 and previous theoretical results. 19,23 It must be remarked that other explanations are also possible, for example the lack of SOC in the calculations of Refs. 25

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and. 51 However, in our simulations, which we performed with and without SOC, we never observed a change of approximately two orders of magnitudes associated to spin-orbit effects. Before closing this section it is worth mentioning that other authors have used a different approach to avoid the problem of determining a suitable value of ∆k. Brivio et al 30 described the energy dispersion curve close to k0 by combining the usual second order expansion with an additional k-dependent function. Fitting the energy dispersion curve near k0 along one specific direction in the reciprocal space, with this more elaborate function they obtained kdependent effective masses that, in the limit of k → k0 , are consistent with those presented in this work. R2 in the table is the coefficient of determination of the sub-band energy distribution for m∗h (left) and m∗e (right). Table 1: Average hole and electron masses, m ¯ h and m ¯ e , for MAPbI3 using the ′ appropriate grid spacing ∆k , together with two inappropriate (too small and too large) grid spacing values: ∆k and ∆k ′′ resulting in abnormal values for the effective masses. ∆k ′ is giving the best R2 value showing the significance of grid spacing on the fitting procedure. ∆k=|~a|/100 ∆k ′ =|~a|/400 ∆k ′′ =|~a|/800

m ¯h 0.05 0.19 18.66

m ¯e 0.35 0.32 0.03

R2 0.67, 0.87 0.93, 0.9 0.80, 0.71

Computational Setup GGA-DFT in the Perdew-Burke-Ernzerhof (PBE) formulation 52 is used to optimize the atomic configuration and lattice parameters of all structures. Calculations are performed using the pw.x code of the Quantum Espresso package. 53 Ultrasoft pseudopotentials are used to describe the interaction between the (semi)valence electrons and the nuclei and core electrons for all of the atoms. The Kohn-Sham orbitals and the total electronic density are expanded in a plane waves basis with energy cutoffs of 40 Ry and 280 Ry, respectively. The Brillouin zone is sampled with a 3×3×3 or 4×4×4 Monkhorst-Pack k-points grid 54 for cubic 8

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and tetragonal/orthorhombic structures, with supercells containing 8 and 4 stoichiometric units, respectively. These values were chosen by checking the convergence of total energy (∼ 1 × 10−3 Ry/atom), band gap (0.01 eV) and atomic forces (∼ 1 × 10−4 Ry/au). GGA-SOC calculations were performed on the perovskite systems to compute their band structure. The effective masses of holes and electrons were obtained by performing a quadratic fit of the 3D band structure at k0 , the k-point corresponding to the VBM and CBM. This required the calculation of the energy of frontier states of the valence and conduction bands on a 3×3×3 grid of k-points centered at k0 (see Fig. S1 in the SI). The suitable number of grid points and grid spacing, ∆k, have been carefully chosen and tested system by system. The quadratic least square fit of the dispersion of the valence and conduction bands at k0 was performed using the “lsqcurvefit” function of MATLAB 7.12. 55 All the fits present a value of the norm of the residual lower than 1.5 × 10−9 eV, indicating a rather accurate parabolic approximation of the valence and conduction bands.

Results and discussion We first focus on the analysis of results of defect-free Cs+ /Na+ /Li+ lead and tin perovskite of I− /Br− /Cl− . All these systems present low hole and electron effective masses close to the supercell Γ point, with minimum values per system ranging from ∼ 0.1 m0 to ∼ 0.6 m0 . The fact that the VBM and CBM occur near the Γ point is due to the supercell used in the present work: this point folds back at the proper k0 point for the unit cell of the given symmetry, e.g. the R point for cubic systems. The principal axes of transport, i.e. the eigenvectors of the effective mass tensor, are oriented along the B-B directions (see Fig. 1). These directions are all equivalent in the case of cubic systems and, thus, charge carrier transport is isotropic (i.e. the masses along the three directions are the same). In the case of tetragonal systems there are two degenerate principal axes of transport in the equatorial plane, and one along the tetragonal axis. Finally,

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of the valence and conduction bands frontier orbitals. This correlation is shown in Figs. 2 and 3 for lead and tin perovskites, respectively. In the panel (a) of this figure the masses of holes and electrons as a function of ∆EV BM and ∆ECBM are reported, respectively, where ∆E = E − Emin with Emin minimum of the VBM or CBM among all the systems considered. We remark that in these and the following figures the effective masses of holes have been reported with the negative sign to plot on the same chart the masses of both carriers. One observes that the trend is almost linear with ∆E: the masses grow with the value of this parameter. Since EV BM and ECBM have an opposite trend with the composition and crystal symmetry, i.e. they concur to widening or shrinking the band gap Eg = ECBM − EV BM , m∗h and m∗e have a linear trend with the band gap as well. The correlation between the hole and electron effective masses and the band gap in the direction observed in this work is consistent with the predictions of both tight binding (TB) and k· p theories. 47 Nevertheless, halide perovskite have some nonconventional features that make the relation between the properties of the material and its composition and structure less obvious and intuitive. As explained in Ref., 16 the VBM has a (antibonding) covalent character; thus TB is well suited for interpreting the properties of this band. On the contrary, the CBM has a much less covalent character, and the k· p theory works better to describe this case. This suggests that a single theory will not be adequate to interpret computational results and link them to the characteristics of the material, and one has to treat them separately. Concerning m∗h , the dependence of the effective mass on the energy of the corresponding band can be explained as follows. Within TB the curvature of the VBM grows with the overlap OVBM between the atomic orbitals contributing to the band 1 , (s orbitals of Sn/Pb and p orbitals of X atoms in the present case). In practice, the higher is the overlap and the higher is the curvature of the band, as a consequence, the lower is the associated effective P  R P ∗ c c O OVBM = Re , with Oij = drΦ∗i (r)Φj (r) and cVBM,i and ij i∈X−mp j∈B−ms VBM,i VBM,j cVBM,j contribution of the atomic orbitals i and j to the VBM, respectively 1

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mass (see Fig. 4). At the same time, the orbital overlap also determines the energy of the VBM, which explains the correlation between m∗h and EV BM (Figs. 2 and 3). Concerning m∗e , as we mentioned above, k· p theory is more suitable to explain the computational results relative to the conduction band and, thus, the electron effective masses. k· p theory is a perturbative approach to the calculation of the energy of the band at a k point in the neighboring of the CBM:

EkCB = EkCB + 0

2 h ¯ 2 X |k · hulk0 |p|uCB h ¯ 2k2 k0 i| + 2 2m m l EkCB − Ekl 0 0

(1)

For the sake of simplicity, here we reported the form without SOC. Nevertheless, this form is sufficient to explain the dependence of m∗e on the composition and crystal structure of the material. m∗e is related to the second order perturbative term, namely it depends on the transition moment integral, hulk0 |p|uCB k0 i, and the energy difference between the CB at k0 and the other bands at the same point, EkCB − Ekm0 . In practice, relevant contributions to 0 EkCB come from bands of suitable symmetry (hulk0 |p|uCB k0 i 6= 0) which are close in energy to the CBM (small EkCB − Ekm0 ). Since the transition moment integral vanishes for most of the 0 conduction bands (see Tables S1 and S2 in the SI), in the present case the major contribution comes from the VBM. Thus, m∗e depends on the band gap and, as we have shown in Ref., 16 this is correlated to OVBM . Summarizing,modifications of the chemical composition and crystal structure are all effective ways to control the orbital overlap and, through it, m∗h and m∗e . For example, cubic perovskites, with linear B-X-B bonds, have maximum overlap, and as a consequence have lower masses with respect to tetragonal and orthorhombic structures. The effect of halides is associated to the ratio between their ionic and covalent radii. The first contributes to determining the lattice size and the second to the orbital overlap (for a fixed interatomic distance). This ratio increases along the sequence I− → Br− → Cl− and, thus, m∗h and m∗e both decrease along the sequence. Finally, monovalent cations have a different effect depending on whether they are in cubic or tilted structures (tetragonal, orthorhombic). In the first 12

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suggesting that related corrections compensate other limitations of GGA-DFT 46 or call for a more physically sound justification of the relevance of dispersion forces in this class of systems. 57 Here we take the pragmatic approach of testing the effect of vdW interactions for hydrogen bonding systems (NH4 PbI3 and PH4 PbI3 ). We optimized the atomistic structure, including the periodic cell, computed the band structure with three empirical (DFT-D2 58 ) and non-local (vdW-DF 59 and vdW-DF2 60 ) methods that take dispersion interactions into account. In Fig. S5 we report the band structure of VBM and CBM of NH4 PbI3 and PH4 PbI3 obtained with the various methods. We found relatively small effects on the structural characteristics of PH4 PbI3 , with a change in the lattice parameters ≤ 1% and a variation of the hole/electron effective masses ≤ 0.02m0 . Also for NH4 PbI3 the change in the structural characteristics was small, with a variation of the lattice parameters of < 2%. Also the variation of the m∗e is small, of the same order of magnitude as the one observed for PH4 PbI3 . On the contrary, the position of the VBM and its dispersion changes significantly. In particular, the curvature of the VBM is further reduced and m∗h increases to ∼ 1.5 m0 , reinforcing our conclusion that strong hydrogen bonding can increase the hole effective mass and, thus, decrease the performance of the material.

Effects of dopants and defects The results discussed in the previous section concern perfect halide perovskite structures. However, materials used in devices contain (intrinsic) defects, especially in the case of perovskites produced via liquid processing; charged vacancy defects are estimated to exceed 0.4 % at room temperature. 61 Moreover, the addition of dopants results in the formation of extrinsic defects. Defects can affect charge carriers masses in many ways. For example, they can introduce deep trap states which favoring recombination reduce the carriers life time. However, it has been shown that the most common intrinsic defects do not introduce these kind of states in halide perovskites (see, e.g., Refs 27,62,63 ), resulting in a very low concentration of carrier traps. 64 Less investigated is the effect of defects on the valence and conduction 16

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bands and, therefore, on effective masses. In the following we will consider the effect of Cs, Pb and I vancancies and Zn and Sr doping on the effective masses of CsSnI3 . The presence of defects breaks the translational symmetry of ideal crystals. Nevertheless, first principles calculations based on periodic systems have been shown to work well to investigate the electronic structure of these type of systems. 64,65 Thus, the effect of defects on effective masses has been studied using the same approach described in Sec. Theory. A final remark is necessary before proceeding with presenting our results. It is known that GGA-DFT adopted in this and most of the computational work on defects in halide perovkites 23,62,66 has potential shortcomings. 67 However, the long lifetime of carriers in halide perovskites suggests that intrinsic defects do not introduce deep states, and the present simulation setup is expected to have less severe problems in this case. Indeed, in absence of defects SOC-GGA-DFT calculations give effective masses in quantitative agreement with SOC-Hybrid-DFT 68 and SOC-GW 19 calculations and experimental data. 32 More recently, GGA-PBE calculations have been employed to successfully interpret experimental data on the annihilation of Frenkel defects in CH3 NH3 PbI3 . 69 Finally, in his work on defects in CH3 NH3 PbI3 , Du 23 remarks that “The PBE calculations [inclusive of SOC] provide sufficiently accurate results on forces (near equilibrium), structures, and band dispersion”. These literature data makes us confident that our setup is adequate to describe the (qualitative) effect of defects on the crystal band structure. Anticipating our results, we remark that VCs ’ and V·I vacancies have minimal effects on × ∗ ∗ the effective masses. On the contrary, VP b ”, Zn× Sn and SrSr significantly increase mh and me .

Effects of dopants: CsSnx D1−x I3 , D=Zn(II), Sr(II) As a first scenario for doping, we substituted Sn with Zn and Sr at a [8:1] ratio. Both dopants widen up the band gap (of 0.7 and 0.3 eV for Zn and Sr, respectively) and split some degenerate states by breaking the symmetry (point X in figure S3 in the SI). While in the Sr-doped system the main features of the band structure of the parent compound,

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Outline We performed first-principles calculations on a large set of halide perovskites aimed at calculating their holes and electrons effective masses. Effective masses are strongly correlated to the energy of the VBM and CBM, and the band gap. This can be explained by means of TB and k· p theories for the valence and conduction bands, respectively. We also investigated the effect of intrinsic and extrinsic defects on the effective masses. Substitutional Zn2+ adds a localized state in the gap and flattens the band edges, especially the CB, resulting in higher effective masses. Pb2+ vacancies reduce the antibonding atomic orbital overlap, resulting in a reduction of the curvature of the VB and an increase of the holes mass. The other defects have minor effects on the effective masses.

Acknowledgement U. R. acknowledges funding from the Swiss National Science Foundation via individual grant No. 200020-146645, the NCCRs MUST and MARVEL, and support from the Swiss National Computing Center (CSCS), the CADMOS project and the NRP70. We also acknowledge PRACE for awarding us access to resource SuperMUC based in Germany at Leibniz.

Supporting Information Available Some details of the procedure for calculation of the effective masses; Symmetry of the bands in pure GGA and GGA+SOC of CsSnI3 ; band structure of all the systems investigated in this work This material is available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org/.

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